WikiLeaks’ latest release from the Vault 7 series of CIA leaks, sheds more light on how ordinary people can be easily tracked and targeted by the US intelligence agency through everyday electronic devices…

In the Achilles user guide, it’s explained that the trojaned .dmg file would behave similarly to the original file, and that all of the operator’s intended executables would run the first time the app is launched. Afterwards, all traces of Achilles would be “removed securely” from the …

In the Achilles user guide, it’s explained that the trojaned .dmg file would behave similarly to the original file, and that all of the operator’s intended executables would run the first time the app is launched. Afterwards, all traces of Achilles would be “removed securely” from the …

It’s modified when in transit from the source file server to the remote machine. When executed on the new machine ‘Pandemic’ will install the program, an iteration of which will now contain modified code.

‘Pandemic’ can replace up to 20 programs, with a maximum size of 800MB.

The latest in WikiLeaks’ series of #Vault7 leaks was released Friday detailing malware that provides remote beacon and loader capabilities on target computers using several Microsoft Windows operating systems. Read Full Article at RT.com

Update 4: According to experts tracking and analyzing the worm and its spread, this could be one of the worst-ever recorded attacks of its kind. The security researcher who tweets and blogs as MalwareTech told The Intercept“I’ve never seen anything like this with ransomware,” and “the last worm of this degree I can remember is Conficker.” Conficker was a notorious Windows worm first spotted in 2008; it went on to infect over nine million computers in nearly 200 countries.As The Intercept details,

Today’s WannaCry attack appears to use an NSA exploit codenamed ETERNALBLUE, a software weapon that would have allowed the spy agency’s hackers to break into any of millions of Windows computers by exploiting a flaw in how certain version of Windows implemented a network protocol commonly used to share files and to print. Even though Microsoft fixed the ETERNALBLUE vulnerability in a March software update, the safety provided there relied on computer users keeping their systems current with the most recent updates. Clearly, as has always been the case, many people (including in governments) are not installing updates. Before, there would have been some solace in knowing that only enemies of the NSA would have to fear having ETERNALBLUE used against them–but from the moment the agency lost control of its own exploit last summer, there’s been no such assurance.

US Corporations’ September 30th fiscal payment deadlineSep 30, 2019USAEach year around that time, as the payment deadline approaches, we see all sorts of maneuvers. The US Corporate government seeks to roll over its payments past the deadline.